The H Word
- Episode aired Aug 18, 2017
- TV-MA
- 51m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
5.2K
YOUR RATING
Matt Murdock, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage and Danny Rand investigate criminals and fight injustice, unaware their paths are about to cross.Matt Murdock, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage and Danny Rand investigate criminals and fight injustice, unaware their paths are about to cross.Matt Murdock, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage and Danny Rand investigate criminals and fight injustice, unaware their paths are about to cross.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe top left corner of the "video feed" in the trailer has an IP address (23.253.120.81) that rolls over to nybulletin.com which emulates a New York newspaper and has video interviews of characters in the Defenders.
- Quotes
Foggy Nelson: The law firm of Hogarth, Chao & Benowitz is at your disposal. In case you need help starting over.
Luke Cage: I'm not starting over, Mr. Nelson. I'm moving forward.
Foggy Nelson: People call me Foggy.
Luke Cage: And you let them?
- SoundtracksSunshine
Written by Galt MacDermot, Yasiin Bey, James Rado, Gerome Ragni, Ye
Performed by Yasiin Bey (as Mos Def)
Featured review
Snoozefest
I am not even going to bother with the series after that. I literally just fast forwarded the entire episode, because it was that boring, you are watching paint dry. There was no reason for them to even be on TV. This is not a comic book, it's a pretentious social study.
Comic books don't have other lives, outside of how to avoid their disguises being caught out, or their relationships finding them out. A comic book doesn't stop too create its pretentious dialogues of their happy day jobs, and relationships. They aren't a superhero, just TV's idiots, playing dress up with their super strength, basically all of these idiots have that ability. All that means is CGI employed for why they are so exceptional, punching through walls while bleeding their hearts out of why they are so strong as its cripples, junkies, traumatized, or handicapped.
A comic sets its comic as a story of its hero and its villains. There really isn't anything else, apart from the chase, and its action. It doesn't stop to dive into another prospective, it's a flick book.
There was no reason for any defenders to be here, what are they defending us against? Nothing but their ego's.
Banshee, Spartacus, Into the Badlands, Blood Drive, today's comics. I will say Marvel's Agent's of Shield does it well enough for its younger audience, doesn't stop, it's cheesy but enjoyable, and the recent robot theme was exceptional. These other shows, not a clue at all, outside of the pretentious reasoning offered, boring screen time watching paint dry while mining for any actual comic content. That flick book comparison. Even the Punisher's 2 episodes of action fell short of the other 8 of utter freaking drivel. American Gods is a novel, but its content had an interesting comparable comic story. Not shouting the zombie theme and its social study of why any zombies aren't a threat.
Netflix just aren't comics at all... Just an ego better not subscribed
Comic books don't have other lives, outside of how to avoid their disguises being caught out, or their relationships finding them out. A comic book doesn't stop too create its pretentious dialogues of their happy day jobs, and relationships. They aren't a superhero, just TV's idiots, playing dress up with their super strength, basically all of these idiots have that ability. All that means is CGI employed for why they are so exceptional, punching through walls while bleeding their hearts out of why they are so strong as its cripples, junkies, traumatized, or handicapped.
A comic sets its comic as a story of its hero and its villains. There really isn't anything else, apart from the chase, and its action. It doesn't stop to dive into another prospective, it's a flick book.
There was no reason for any defenders to be here, what are they defending us against? Nothing but their ego's.
Banshee, Spartacus, Into the Badlands, Blood Drive, today's comics. I will say Marvel's Agent's of Shield does it well enough for its younger audience, doesn't stop, it's cheesy but enjoyable, and the recent robot theme was exceptional. These other shows, not a clue at all, outside of the pretentious reasoning offered, boring screen time watching paint dry while mining for any actual comic content. That flick book comparison. Even the Punisher's 2 episodes of action fell short of the other 8 of utter freaking drivel. American Gods is a novel, but its content had an interesting comparable comic story. Not shouting the zombie theme and its social study of why any zombies aren't a threat.
Netflix just aren't comics at all... Just an ego better not subscribed
helpful•1285
- greenwhich
- Aug 17, 2017
Details
- Runtime51 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
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What is the broadcast (satellite or terrestrial TV) release date of The H Word (2017) in Mexico?
Answer